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[ecrea] Call for Papers: Redefining Journalism in the Era of the Mass Press
Fri Oct 12 11:56:24 GMT 2012
I'd like to draw your attention to the following call for papers:
*/Redefining Journalism in the Era of the Mass Press/*
University of Sheffield, 5 July 2013.
*Confirmed Keynote Speakers:*
*Professor Joel H. Wiener *(City University of New York)
*Professor Jane Chapman *(Lincoln University, UK)
*Professor Martin Conboy *(University of Sheffield, UK)* *
This conference seeks to interrogate two key trajectories arising from
the change or stasis in the role perceptions of journalism that occurred
between 1880 and 1920 with the rise of the mass press. The way we speak
of and interrogate this period continues to exert great influence in
terms of how we understand contemporary journalism, and how we
conceptualize the role of the journalist in terms of its historical,
cultural and economic development.
Specifically, this conference aims to discuss how we now define
journalism at the end of the 19^th century from our contemporary and
comparative perspective.
It seeks to contrast this with how contemporaries defined journalism
during this actual period of transition.
Was there an expression of shifting role perception towards journalism
and the journalist at the onset of the era of the mass press?
We are inviting contributions to help craft a taxonomy of journalism at
the cusp of the twentieth century, a chronology of significant
indicators that help describe this period and its ongoing significance
to journalism scholarship. We welcome papers on various countries,
international comparisons or transnational developments.
*/ Abstracts of 500 words/* are invited for consideration as
contributions to this conference, the next event hosted by the research
network, /Capturing Change in Journalism: Shifting Role Perceptions at
the Turn of the 20^th and 21^st Centuries/. This network, which is*
*funded by the British AHRC and the Dutch NWO, and run by the journalism
departments of the universities of Groningen and Sheffield has already
held a successful launch event in September 2012, which discussed how we
can /Conceptualize Role Perceptions and Change in Journalism/.
* Deadline for submission: *31st January 2013
· *For more information, please contact: *Dr John Steel
((j.steel /at/ sheffield.ac.uk) <mailto:(j.steel /at/ sheffield.ac.uk)>)
*Conference Themes:*
Journalism at the end of the nineteenth century could be said to have
entered an era of creative reformulation. Yet this era was not
necessarily one which was marked primarily by technological changes but
rather by an accumulation of social and cultural changes in the
expectations of what journalism was supposed to deliver.
These shifts in expectation were in turn reconstituting the role of the
journalist. This was not a simple trajectory but one which bore the
cultural traces of many previous iterations of the role of the public
communicator. The changes in perception of the journalist and journalism
were not driven by or even most importantly structured by technological
changes but perhaps more by the confluence of cultural and political
expectations of periodical publications directed commercially towards
the masses.
What was the role of the reporter in this new era? The journalist may be
defined at this point onwards by his/her engagement with mass popular
audiences and the extent to which these
contrasted/complemented/contradicted rival perceptions of the journalist
as either a hack or a political publicist. It might be that the
technological and infrastructural changes of the late nineteenth century
were not as significant as the political and cultural purposes to which
journalism was now contributing.
Of course the coming of the mass press was not a phenomenon restricted
to the UK and its geo-cultural variations had complex interactions with
one another. We therefore encourage various national and international
perspectives on change in this period.
*Context of the research project:*
This interdisciplinary project is made more urgent by the need of
scholars, journalists and the media industry to tackle what is often
labeled as a growing ʽcrisis of journalismʼ. While there is a certain
level of agreement in scholarship on the importance of journalism for
democracy and civil engagement, as well as over the existence of a
contemporary economic and professional crisis, research that strives to
understand the structure of transformation is scarce. Much like its
position at the turn of the 20^th century, journalism is now forced to
reconsider the roles it can play in society and to come up with new
justifications for its position. The contemporary influence of
digitization, Internet and mobile communications is changing the
informational needs of citizens and the news media must adapt. This
project argues that crucial to understanding journalismʼs future role is
looking to previous moments when its position in society was seemingly
tenuous. It aims to amplify this research theme by clarifying how
journalists themselves perceive their role and their relationship with
the public -- historically, in contemporary society, and going forward.
Regards,
John
Dr. John Steel
Programme Leader MA International Political Communication
Department of Journalism Studies
University of Sheffield
18-22 Regent Street
Sheffield
S1 3NJ
0114 2222545
(j.steel /at/ sheffield.ac.uk) <mailto:(j.steel /at/ sheffield.ac.uk)>
http://www.shef.ac.uk/journalism/staff/steel.html
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